- 30
Georges Seurat
Description
- Georges Seurat
- L'arroseur
- Conté crayon on paper
- 12 1/2 by 9 5/8 in.
- 31.8 by 24.5 cm.
- Executed circa 1883, this work is registered in the Georges Seurat archives held at Galerie Brame et Lorenceau.
Provenance
Wildenstein & Co., New York
Collection of Mr. Paul Mellon (acquired from the above in 1956)
Collection of Mrs. Paul Mellon (Christmas gift from the above, December 1956)
Exhibited
Washington D.C., National Gallery of Art, French Paintings from The Collections of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon and Mrs. Mellon Bruce, Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Exhibition, 1941-1966, 1966, cat. no. 243, illustrated
Literature
Condition
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Catalogue Note
The singularity of Seurat’s drawings lies in pꦓart to his use of the medium of conté crayon and textured, hand-made Michalet paper. He was the first to master the combination of these two elements to create an array of dazzling 𝓰;effects ranging from intense black to the most vibrant light. As Meyer Shapiro has argued, the radiance which seems to emanate from Seurat’s drawings lies in the fact that the conté crayon only marked the upper “ridge” of the laid lines of the paper, leaving the white “groove” untouched, so the white paper seems to glow beneath the layer of black crayon. Contrary to the artist’s paintings where the luminous colored dots adhere to the surface of the canvas, here the light emanates from within the drawing itself.